A gaffe, in reverse

by Andrew Coyne on Wednesday, October 7, 2009 8:48pm - 103 Comments

The drug of choice among political journalists is the gaffe. It is either a trivial slip of the tongue — especially, in Michael Kinsley’s immortal definition, when a politician tells the truth — or some trifling but embarrassing incident: a dropped football here, a silly hairnet there, indicative of nothing in particular but invested with all manner of spurious significance by the media herd.

It’s nonsense, of course. The only significance of the gaffe is that it fits a narrative, or rather that a narrative can be made to fit around it. A politician’s campaign is failing. He eats an ill-judged banana. Therefore the banana-eating becomes a “metaphor” for the campaign, or even a “defining moment.” Defining him as … what? As a politician who eats bananas and loses elections. It’s entirely self-referential.

Something of the same phenomenon is at work with regard to Stephen Harper’s celebrated performance at the National Arts Centre the other night — only in reverse. Here, the media has inflated the importance not of a minor embarrassment, but a minor triumph. But in all other respects it functions exactly like a gaffe. A reverse gaffe, if you will.

Instead of a campaign bus with a flat tire, we’re now finding vast import in a politician who can carry a tune. And for the same reason: because it suits our professional need for narrative. The narrative the media had settled on for this week was of Ignatieff the stumblebum, the guy who couldn’t get anything right; in contrast, Harper’s exquisitely timed appearance seemed to confirm he could do no wrong. Why, he even sang on key!

So what? It has no meaning beyond that, tells us nothing we did not know about him before, sheds exactly zero light on his ability to govern the country. For God’s sake, we’re not picking a boyfriend here. We’re choosing a prime minister.

Well, no. It tells us a couple of things, neither of them particularly worth celebrating. One, that Harper really has lost any sense of shame. The old Harper would never have lowered himself to playing the organ grinder’s monkey for the tax-funded Ottawa elite. Perhaps it speaks well of him that he is not above such things — that he is secure enough to abase himelf — though I rather prefer a politician with a sense of dignity.

But it’s the weirdly rapturous reaction of the crowd, so over-the-top, so out of proportion to the actual event (People! It’s not like he sang the “Vissi d’Arte” from Tosca. Even Ringo couldn’t butcher that five-note tune) that I find most fascinating. It wasn’t so long ago that a chill would have come over that room when he walked on stage. I think what we saw that night was official Ottawa transferring its allegiance. Power, they can sense, is consolidating in Harper’s hands. Now it was time to kneel and kiss his ring.

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  • http://www.intensedebate.com/people/Crit_Reasoning Crit_Reasoning

    I agree, but there are a lot of voters out there who aren't particularly well-informed and who don't follow politics.

    For many voters, it comes down to their "gut feeling" about a politician. Much like choosing a boyfriend.

  • Will

    I disagree that the Ottawa audience transferred its allegiance that night. It was simply Canadians being Canadians… we are way too nice and polite most of the time, not a bad thing.

    There was nothing wrong with the song. The audience was there on a Saturday night for a special evening, they were already in a good mood and Harper walks out on stage and sings a song. How could anyone not give him a polite standing ovation? Even I, as a Liberal would have stood up for him that night. Doesn't mean I'll ever vote for him.

    I agree with everything else you're saying though. I would also say the media seem to be a bit bored in Ottawa sometimes. It's their duty to cover this story but the fact that we're still analyzing it today shows we're a little obsessed about nothing. This is being treated like Harper just turned water into wine, which is kind of disgusting for us Liberals.

    • McC

      Ottawans in general, and National Arts Centre crowds in particular, have long had a reputation (apocryphal?) for giving standing ovations to most any preformance, whether mediocre or astounding. Andrew Cohen (hack) mentions it in his (hack) writing on Ottawa's chronic mediocrity here:
      http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.ht…

  • AT1

    Geez, lighten up! He sang better than I would have believed, and showed remarkable composure doing. More than that, he played piano while singing, thereby disproving that any allegation that he couldn't walk and chew gum at the same time. If only he could have solved middle east problems at the same time, right?

    This story is about as useful as Chretien water skiing or replenishing the case of beer on the reporters bus, but it offers a little glimpse into the private life of the PM: that they are practiced at something besides politicking. Isn't is nice to see some well-rounded characteristics in our leaders? What exactly is wrong with that?

    As for Ignatieff, his utter lack of grace and humility, following this was equally revealing. Surprisingly, Jack Layton actually got it when he congratulated the PM for having some fun.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

      Yes, it may have been Ignatieff's reaction that becomes the lasting impression of the evening.

      Ignatieff's lack of grace demonstrated a nasty streak that we had not seen before and possibly undermined his efforts to connect with Canadians.

      • Orson Bean

        Yes, rather ironic, when it's Harper who's supposed to be Mr. Angry.

  • Will

    Harper should enjoy this moment while it lasts because I have a feeling he and his team are going to do something stupid or offensive pretty soon. When have they not screwed up when they were high in the polls? Every time they reach 40%, they either get greedy or someone in the party says or does something that drops them down to the mid to low 30's..

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/jolyon jolyon

    I agree that image matters a great deal but disagree that only its only important to the uninformed.

    I think only a small sliver of the electorate completely ignore their thoughts on the character of each PM-in-waiting when it comes election time. Nowadays, it's better to be loved than feared.

  • http://www.intensedebate.com/people/jolyon jolyon

    I agree that image matters a great deal but disagree that it's only important to the uninformed.

    I think only a small sliver of the electorate completely ignore their thoughts on the character of each PM-in-waiting when it comes election time. Nowadays, it's better to be loved than feared.

  • http://theplaceofbiff.blogspot.com biff

    Harper's liberal detractors are now learning that their sword of the petty and personal slices both ways.

    I seem to recall a picture of Harper looking odd wearing a cowboy vest, grabbing headlines and drawing rapturous ridicule from the left.

    The left has relentlessly talked about every petty aspect of his person, in an effort to derive meaning to fulfill the "Harper is mean and cold" meme. From a particular stare (highlighted in green color I recall) to his tone, to the way he walked with his son to school.

    In an instance where the politics of personal image is now drawing a distinctly more favourable picture of Harper, the left suddenly cries out for substance over image.

    The two sided sword is dangerous indeed.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/jolyon jolyon

    Did you see Valpy's article in the Globe yesterday?

    Its intro was:

    "The Liberal Leader's appeal was taken for granted when he entered politics. But now his party is struggling to reconnect with women who say they find him stuffy, inauthentic and untrustworthy"

  • Steve V

    "But it’s the weirdly rapturous reaction of the crowd, so over-the-top, so out of proportion to the actual event "

    Might have something to do with the subject matter. Harper appearing like a normal human being is an intoxicating novelty. It's like that time Data on Star Trek almost cried.

  • Ted

    Coyne is part of "the left"????

  • http://theplaceofbiff.blogspot.com biff

    I was referring to the commenters here.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Sir_Francis Sir_Francis

    Yeah. Anyone who disagrees with Biff is clearly part of Canada's Maoist far-left…

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Crit_Reasoning Crit_Reasoning

    Welcome back! Loved your latest. My score was 24.

  • jim

    Coyne: of course there are never any fluffy stories in the magazine you edit right?

    • Ryan

      The picture of some Liberal staffer on his birthday on one of the other blogs here is something that will resonate outside of Ottawa. Where was Michael Ignatieff singing Happ Birthday to this guy?

  • http://twitter.com/TwainShallMeet @TwainShallMeet

    Stephen Harper cannot make me believe that this was spontaneous. At any rate the performance was Ok, not great, and he did sing outta tune a time or two. nice to have very talented backup musicians with good voices too. It covered much of the amateurs weakness.

    I don't think he is a Beatle and I know he is no Rolling Stone. He has been gathering moss for Four years now.

    • 8^)

      You're aware that he has a day job, right?

      And no, it wasn't spontaneous…so?

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Sir_Francis Sir_Francis

    Ah ha! So you’re a “ballpark” type. Were you given your copy of Atlas Shrugged? ;)

    Speaking of scores, because of my long absence, I’m sitting at a pathetic 54 on Popularity. How mortifying!

    At this rate, it’ll take months to turn myself into someone who’s ostensibly respected by his peers…

    • kcm

      Can you hold a tune…or play piano?

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/Sir_Francis Sir_Francis

        No. But I can hold a piano and play a tune…

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

    "The reason the audience didn't go all chilly and humourless is because Canadians have finally realized how idiotic the "scary guy" meme was after seeing Harper in office for several years."

    If this comment actually reflets the mood in the country, then this week's reaction is indeed significant in political terms and Mr Ignatieff should now begin to unpack his things at Stornoway.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/s_c_f s_c_f

    I do agree with Andrew in some ways. It is rather elitist, that the PM has free reign to tinkle the keys like that. Any other joe jumping on stage to play a tune would be arrested. He's basking in the glow of being the top dog.

    But… on the other hand, it works, if vote-getting is the goal, and if having fun was the goal, it did look like he had fun. Harper got rave reviews across the board. And he did seem like a down-to-earth guy. So, if that's what people need to see for their vote, then that's not an indictment of him. And when it comes to elitism, this is a very mild case of it. It's a bit like the guy singing karaoke in the bar who won't sit down.

    I also think the press is going overboard on Iggy, and overboard on this piano thing. Seems like everything is exaggerated these days.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Thwim Thwim

      Death throes.

  • hosertohoosier

    I agree and disagree with you Mr. Coyne.

    On the one hand, the main impact of this PR success will be short-lived. Harper will get a bounce (maybe) and it will mostly recede. Most voters (or at least the swing voters who actually matter, rather than the partisans whose minds are already made up) are self-interested maximizers of their own well-being. Past economic performance, perceptions of leader competence and party platforms, among other things, drive voting behavior. Dropped footballs only seem to matter in a world of horserace coverage plus 3% margins of error.

    However, the politics of personality do have a somewhat important long-term impact. Politicians can make promises till the cows come home, but people are often skeptical. An increasingly cynical electorate doesn't just look for commitments, but credible ones. The knowledge that Harper is a "guy like me" is valuable. It also explains much of the apprehension towards Harper from the chattering class (they need to start asking "which candidate would you most want to drink a glass of chardonnay with"), Maritimers and French Canadians. If Harper seems like an angry right-wing ideologue, or the second coming of Wolfe (and hey, he does have a pretty square head) his explicit promises are not going to be deemed credible by folks that fear a hidden agenda.

  • wilson

    10 months ago, every media outlet had Harper done, toast, bye bye.
    Then he walks out on stage, a survivor, an extraordinary man, our Prime Minister.
    Yah just get a sense, things are going to be ok.

  • http://runesmith.blogspot.com J_Smith

    Canada, welcome to your Bush years.

    • kcm

      Please…don't go there.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Crit_Reasoning Crit_Reasoning

      It's entirely possible that six years from now, the PM will be in his fifth election campaign, fighting to win his second majority and his fourth consecutive mandate, and "Harper = Bush" will still be a popular slogan amongst his increasingly desperate opponents.

      • Orson Bean

        Agreed — keep on with that "Harper=Bush" bs, and keep on guaranteeing that Harper & Co will occupy 24 Sussex. If that's the best that that anti-Harper crowd can come up with, then they deserve to be in opposition. Yeesh.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/psiclone psiclone

      Bush who?

  • Michael

    "I think what we saw that night was official Ottawa transferring its allegiance. Power, they can sense, is consolidating in Harper’s hands. Now it was time to kneel and kiss his ring"

    Where have I heard that tune before? Ah…

    "Madam, I surrender. Let us forget past criticisms. Let us put aside old quarrels. Your speech has collapsed my defences. You are my Commander-in-Chief" (28 Sept 05)

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/OntarioTown OntarioTown

    Mr. Coyne, you and Paul Wells had an excellent forum on democracy. Hopefully, it will continue.

    Democracy today is mind manipulation. Journalists, money, spin doctors and image makers – to hell with issues and facts.

    Think about it – vote for a guy because he plays a piano in front of rich and biased supporters like the Aspers. The so-called surprise – that was planned a month in advance.

    I'm glad Harper plays and enjoys the piano – does it make a difference in my life – no.

  • peter

    Let's see, crazy lefty opinion leaders calling him a stiff for six years costing the party hundreds of thousands of votes. Cuts to the arts costing him at least 10 points in Quebec. His image in "oh so swishy Toronto and Vancouver culture crowd" as a neanderthal costing the party dozens of seats.

    Two minutes at the NAC smashing the negative memes into a thousand pieces…Priceless.

    More over the tongue in cheek choice of material for a guy who just finessed his way through two potentially election triggering votes in the House, against the odds I might add…lighten up and cut the guy some slack, perhaps he really is what those who have bothered to follow what he has actually said and done as opposed the negative image the media has tried so hard to cultivate.

  • John W.

    I'm sure you're right about it being planned a month in advance. And, that Jane Taber Globe story saying it was all Laureen and only Laureen was pure spin that the media picked up and reported as if it were true.
    You can bet it was researched, focus grouped, and polled.
    The media still don't seem to understand what they are dealing with. They'll fall for just about anything.

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